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research article

Spontaneous and evoked synaptic rewiring in the neonatal neocortex

Le Be, J. V.  
•
Markram, H.  
2006
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)

The local microcircuitry of the neocortex is structurally a tabula rasa, with the axon of each pyramidal neuron having numerous submicrometer appositions with the dendrites of all neighboring pyramidal neurons, but is functionally highly selective, with synapses formed onto only a small proportion of these targets. This design leaves a vast potential for the microcircuit to rewire without extensive axonal or dendritic growth. To examine whether rewiring does take place, we used multineuron patch-clamp recordings on 12- to 14-day-old rat neocortical slices and studied long-term changes in synaptic connectivity within clusters of neurons. We found pyramidal neurons spontaneously connecting and disconnecting from each other and that exciting the slice with glutamate greatly increases the number of new connections established. Evoked emergence of new synaptic connections requires action potential activity and activation of metabotropic glutamate receptor 5, but not NMDA receptor or group II or group III metabotropic glutamate receptor activation. We also found that it is the weaker connections that are selectively eliminated. These results provide direct evidence for spontaneous and evoked rewiring of the neocortical microcircuitry involving entire functional multisynaptic connections. We speculate that this form of microcircuit plasticity enables an evolution of the microcircuit connectivity by natural selection as a function of experience.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1073/pnas.0604691103
Web of Science ID

WOS:000240380800049

PubMed ID

16924105

Author(s)
Le Be, J. V.  
Markram, H.  
Date Issued

2006

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Published in
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)
Volume

103

Issue

35

Start page

13214

End page

9

Subjects

Neuronal Plasticity

Note

Brain Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNMC  
BBP-CORE  
Available on Infoscience
February 27, 2008
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/19369
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